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Scholarship an Artist/Creative

Why Creativity?

It’s filled with unique tensions, contradictions and dilemmas. And it comes with heavy doses of doubt, fear, block, burn-out and rejection.

So why do we do it?

Why do we sacrifice and slave for years practicing a craft despite the odds of success?

Why do we constantly offer ourselves and our work to a world too busy to notice and critics too confident to care?

I think I know.

I think you do too.

At our very core, we are social beings. We are designed for connection. And we thrive in communion and community.

Creativity is a communal activity. One we have within ourselves with all the personas and characters that inhabit us. And one we have with others like us (and not like us) in the nooks and crannies of this globally local world.

What follows are my responses to “why creativity?” I look forward to hearing your ideas, beliefs and questions in the comments!

Why creativity?

Because creativity is simultaneously limited and limitless.

Because creativity seeks what is and what can be, rather than what could be or should be.

Creativity lets us see the unseen. Feel the unfelt. And say the unsaid.

Poet, James Dickey, is often quoted as saying, “What you have to realize when you write poetry, or if you love poetry, is that poetry is just naturally the greatest –––damn thing that ever was in the whole universe.”

That pretty much sums up the creative life, doesn’t it?

That’s why we continue to do what we do, no matter what.

We can’t stop trying to connect things to see what emerges and blooms.

Creativity is the practice of craft and community. Through our craft, we connect things. Through community, we connect people to each other, ourselves and our work.

What do you think?

What does creativity mean to you?

Why do you continue practicing the creative life?

Keith Jennings is a professional writer, editor and marketing advisor with a diverse portfolio of creative and commercial work. His blog, Keitharsis, is a resource for Creatives (both part-time and professional) facing blocks, burn-out and doubt. Connect with him at www.keithjennings.com

If this sparks your creative heart, please click one of the buttons below to spread these powerful thoughts.

“Because creativity is a sonic landscape. An emotional orgasm. A sensory experience. Simultaneously real and unreal.”–I just love that statement.

We create on so many levels. I create when I decorate my home, put together an outfit, make jewelry, paint, write music or literature. Creativity is peeling away a tiny part of your soul and putting it on display for everyone to see.

This is so great! It adds so much clarity to things to have a name for it…a definition…something tangible to acknowledge and say, yes! That is it! It doesn’t make it any less messy, but so much more concrete.

For me it is a temendous strength, encased in the most vulnerable wrapping.

I must say, how incredibly enriching it is to find this community of creatives. While I’m trying to work it all out internally, I get this sense that is what we are all doing…trying to find peace with this thing that is so much larger than we are. How are we to be a proper vessel for its outpouring…I think that’s where the vulnerability for me lies.

@Nikki, Nikki, it’s so great to see you here! Thank you for coming over today!

Want to know a little secret? This began as a post on what’s called 4-quadrant creativity. Then I tried to morph it into a meditation on the theme of connection. Then I had the idea of a list. But not the traditional list-style post you see on blogs. I borrowed from the poetry tradition!

You are so right about how great it is to find a community. It’s so much easier to write when you have people you want surprise and delight!Keith Jennings´s last blog post ..Why Creativity? And Why the Creative Life?

Great post, Keith! Truly resonated with me. I ask myself “why do you continue does this?” all the time (especially when going through times of doubt, fear, block, burn-out and rejection). I don’t always have an answer, but I always bounce back to create more. I think it’s because I love to share. Sure I can be selfish at times too, but I love truly love to share.

In art I love to share what I see and how I see it. I enjoy the feedback (the positive and even the negative); it usually propels my forward to try or create something new. I also enjoy seeing what others see and how they see those things. I think your sentence at the end of the post says it best: “Creativity is the practice of craft and community.”

And don’t worry about being selfish either. Selfish has a positive and negative side. A yin and yang, so to speak. Technically, everything we do is selfish. The real question is this: is what we’re doing constructive or destructive to ourselves and others?

Oh Keith. You are such a beautiful soul and spirit. You have covered the realm of creativity in such a meaningful and holistic way. For me, I know that I would simply die without accessing that part of myself – the part that explores, discovers, changes and grows; the part that stretches my sense of the world and myself, the part that helps me love others and look at the world with eyes wide open, with awe and wonder.

@Léna Roy, I’m so happy to see your name! Thank you for taking time to read and comment! I know how busy you are.

I love your comment on creativity stretching our sense of the world and ourselves! Yes! Yes! It stretches us, indeed.

I think when we lose the curiosity, the wonder, the awe, we become uncreative. Our real work is inner cultivation so that we can receive seeds and give them their best chance.Keith Jennings´s last blog post ..Why Creativity? And Why the Creative Life?

Keith, I loved your list. So many of the reasons you listed for why we create resonated with me. Fear used to keep me from creating and writing but I’ve learned that when I create I am constantly seeing opportunities of growth and discovery. I think this is what I love most about writing.

My thesis is this: We mistakenly believe that if we can eliminate the distractions, doubts and fears in our lives, we can finally do great work. However, truly great work lies in our life’s tensions. Because its our weaknesses and imperfections (i.e. our humanity) that bind us together.

I’m going to read this post several times – these are all great thoughts!

I would add…

…because we were made in the image of a Creator. We are expressing the image of God in us when we create.

… because creativity is exploration, and, as you said, discovery. When I’m creating, I usually feel like I’m not forcing something into existence, but rather finding something that’s been there all along, waiting to be revealed. I hardly feel that I can take any credit for the art, except that I kept diligently looking for it.

Lastly, creativity gives us a language beyond our normal speech. We learn a great deal more about temptation, for instance, when we read about Frodo’s struggle against the lure of the Ring than we do by hearing someone say “Temptation can be difficult to resist.”Chris´s last blog post ..Kill Stress Before It Kills You

God creates something from nothing. But we can’t do that, right? What we can do is collect things and connect them in ways that surprise (both us and others).

Like chefs, we connect things to create new tastes. Like chemists, we mix things to create reactions. And like archeologists, we research and dig until we uncover something hidden.Keith Jennings´s last blog post ..Why Creativity? And Why the Creative Life?

Creativity is just part of who I am. It brings out passion and vision and ideas in me that nothing else can do. Without doing the hard work of being creative, I would be bored, sitting on the couch with nothing to do.

Oh, I completely agree with you, Keith! I try to have at least a half day each week where I lay on the couch, watch movies, read…pretty much whatever I want to do. I just meant without my creative outlets, I might spend ALL my time there. Definitely not a good thing.Jason Vana´s last blog post ..Launching a Facebook Fan Page